The liquid crystal display device of the present invention includes a liquid crystal cell having a liquid crystal layer including liquid crystal molecules having a positive dielectric anisotropy, and a pair of polarizers and at least one phase difference compensator that are provided outside the liquid crystal cell. The liquid crystal display device of the present invention displays an image in a normally black mode. A pair of electrodes provided so as to interpose the liquid crystal layer therebetween produce a transverse electric field component parallel to the plane of the liquid crystal layer in the presence of an applied voltage, and the orientation axis direction, which is defined by the azimuth angle of the orientation direction of the liquid crystal molecules near the center of the liquid crystal layer in the thickness direction thereof, is changed by the transverse electric field component.
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1. A liquid crystal display device, comprising:
a liquid crystal cell having a pair of substrates, a horizontal orientation liquid crystal layer provided between the pair of substrates and including liquid crystal molecules having a positive dielectric anisotropy, and a plurality of pixels each being defined by a pair of electrodes opposing each other via the liquid crystal layer therebetween; and a pair of polarizers and at least one phase difference compensator provided outside the liquid crystal cell, wherein: the pair of polarizers and the at least one phase difference compensator are arranged so that a display brightness is lower in an absence of an electric field applied across the liquid crystal layer than in a presence of an electric field applied across the liquid crystal layer; and the pair of electrodes produce a transverse electric field component parallel to a plane of the liquid crystal layer in a presence of an applied voltage therebetween, and an orientation axis direction, which is defined by an azimuth angle of an orientation direction of liquid crystal molecules near a center of the liquid crystal layer in a thickness direction thereof, is changed by the transverse electric field component. 2. The liquid crystal display device of
wherein the pair of polarizers are arranged so that polarization axes thereof are orthogonal to each other.
3. The liquid crystal display device of
wherein the liquid crystal layer is a homogenous alignment type liquid crystal layer.
4. The liquid crystal display device of
wherein an azimuth angle direction of an orientation direction of the liquid crystal molecules of the liquid crystal layer in a presence of an applied voltage varies depending on a position in a thickness direction of the liquid crystal layer.
5. The liquid crystal display device of
wherein the liquid crystal layer includes, in each of the plurality of pixels, a plurality of domains whose orientation axis directions differ from one other.
6. The liquid crystal display device of
wherein the plurality of domains include domains whose orientation axis directions differ from each other by 180°C.
7. The liquid crystal display device of
wherein the liquid crystal layer includes, in each of the plurality of pixels, a plurality of regions whose orientation axis directions change in different directions in a presence of an applied voltage, and the plurality of regions have an equal area and are arranged symmetrically.
8. The liquid crystal display device of
wherein the pair of electrodes produce transverse electric field components of different directions in a presence of an applied voltage.
9. The liquid crystal display device of
wherein the transverse electric field components of different directions include transverse electric field components of directions differing from each other by 180°C.
10. The liquid crystal display device of
wherein a direction of the transverse electric field component produced by the pair of electrodes is at an angle of 60°C to 90°C with respect to the orientation axis direction of the liquid crystal layer in an absence of an applied voltage.
11. The liquid crystal display device of
wherein at least one of the pair of electrodes is a conductive layer including openings therein, thereby producing the transverse electric field component.
12. The liquid crystal display device of
13. The liquid crystal display of
14. The liquid crystal display of
15. The liquid crystal display of
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1. Field of the Invention
The present invention relates to a liquid crystal display device, and more particularly to a liquid crystal display device having a horizontal orientation liquid crystal layer.
2. Description of the Prior Art
A liquid crystal display device (also referred to by the abbreviation "LCD") is a flat panel display device having desirable characteristics such as a small thickness, a small weight, and a small power consumption. However, TN (Twisted Nematic) type LCDs, which are widely used in the art, have a problem in that the display quality varies depending on the direction from which they are observed (viewing angle), i.e., have poor viewing angle characteristics. Particularly, the display characteristics vary significantly when the viewing angle is changed in the orientation axis direction defined by the azimuth direction of the orientation direction of liquid crystal molecules (the direction of the long axis of the liquid crystal molecules in the plane of the liquid crystal layer) that are near the center of the liquid crystal cell in the thickness direction thereof (also referred to as "the orientation axis direction of the intermediate layer of the liquid crystal cell"). Specifically, when the angle at which the LCD is observed is changed in the orientation axis direction of the intermediate layer of the liquid crystal cell, the display characteristics (e.g., the contrast ratio) become asymmetric about the normal direction (the direction normal to the display plane). Moreover, in an intermediate gray level display, there occurs a display brightness (gray level) inversion phenomenon. In an intermediate gray level display, when the viewing angle direction is inclined from the direction normal to the display plane (viewing angle è=0°C) toward one direction (e.g., upwardly) in the orientation axis direction of the intermediate layer of the liquid crystal cell (i.e., when the viewing angle è is increased from 0°C), the display brightness once increases and then decreases after a certain angle. When the viewing angle direction is inclined toward the opposite direction (e.g., downwardly) in the orientation axis direction of the intermediate layer of the liquid crystal cell, the display brightness once decreases and then increases after a certain angle.
Various techniques have been developed in the art to improve the viewing angle characteristics of the TN type LCD. For example, Japanese Laid-Open Patent Publication No. 7-43719 discloses a liquid crystal display device having electrooptical characteristics of a normally white mode, in which at least one of a pair of electrodes for applying an electric field across the liquid crystal layer is provided with slits whose long side is parallel to the average orientation direction of the liquid crystal molecules being projected onto the substrate (substantially the same as the orientation axis direction of the intermediate layer of the liquid crystal cell). With this configuration, an inclined electric field is produced in the liquid crystal layer in each pixel. As a result, a plurality of regions where liquid crystal molecules rise in respectively different directions are formed in each pixel, thereby improving the viewing angle characteristics.
However, according to a study conducted by the present inventors, although the technique disclosed in Japanese Laid-Open Patent Publication No. 7-43719 is effective in reducing the change in the brightness occurring as the viewing angle is changed in the orientation axis direction of the intermediate layer of the liquid crystal cell, it falls short of solving the asymmetry of the display characteristics about the normal direction and the inversion phenomenon. Moreover, with this technique, the display contrast ratio as viewed from the normal direction is lower than that of other conventional TN type LCDs.
An object of the present invention is to provide a liquid crystal display device having desirable viewing angle characteristics.
The object is achieved by a liquid crystal display device as set forth below. A liquid crystal display device of the present invention is a liquid crystal display device having a normally black mode electrooptical characteristics and including: a liquid crystal cell having a pair of substrates, a horizontal orientation liquid crystal layer provided between the pair of substrates and including liquid crystal molecules having a positive dielectric anisotropy, and a plurality of pixels each being defined by a pair of electrodes opposing each other via the liquid crystal layer therebetween; and a pair of polarizers and at least one phase difference compensator provided outside the liquid crystal cell, wherein: the pair of polarizers and the at least one phase difference compensator are arranged so that the transmittance is lower in the absence of an electric field applied across the liquid crystal layer than in the presence of an electric field applied across the liquid crystal layer; and the pair of electrodes produce a transverse electric field component parallel to the plane of the liquid crystal layer in the presence of an applied voltage therebetween, and an orientation axis direction, which is defined by the azimuth angle of the orientation direction of liquid crystal molecules near the center of the liquid crystal layer in the thickness direction thereof, is changed by the transverse electric field component.
The liquid crystal display device of the present invention has desirable viewing angle characteristics. Since the liquid crystal display device of the present invention uses a horizontal orientation liquid crystal layer, there is provided a wide variety of materials to choose from, and the liquid crystal display device can be manufactured by using a reliable material. Moreover, since the transverse electric field component for improving the viewing angle dependence of the brightness can be produced only by providing an opening in a conventional electrode, the liquid crystal display device can be easily manufactured by using a conventional manufacturing method.
The pair of polarizers may be arranged so that polarization axes thereof are orthogonal to each other.
The liquid crystal layer may be a homogenous alignment type liquid crystal layer. Preferably, the azimuth angle direction of the orientation direction of the liquid crystal molecules of the liquid crystal layer in the presence of an applied voltage varies depending on the position in the thickness direction of the liquid crystal layer.
Preferably, the liquid crystal layer includes, in each of the plurality of pixels, a plurality of domains whose orientation axis directions differ from one other.
Preferably, the plurality of domains include domains whose orientation axis directions differ from each other by 180°C.
Preferably, the pair of electrodes produce transverse electric field components of different directions in the presence of an applied voltage. More preferably, the transverse electric field components of different directions include transverse electric field components of directions differing from each other by 180°C.
Preferably, the liquid crystal layer includes, in each of the plurality of pixels, a plurality of regions whose orientation axis directions change in different directions in the presence of an applied voltage, and the plurality of regions have an equal area and are arranged symmetrically.
Preferably, the direction of the transverse electric field component produced by the pair of electrodes is at an angle of 60°C to 90°C with respect to the orientation axis direction of the liquid crystal layer in the absence of an applied voltage.
At least one of the pair of electrodes may be a conductive layer including openings therein, thereby producing the transverse electric field component.
Preferably, the liquid crystal display device further includes another phase difference compensator for compensating for the retardation of the liquid crystal layer in the absence of an applied voltage for light incident from a direction inclined from the direction normal to the plane of the liquid crystal layer. The above-described object and other objects of the present invention will become more apparent by reading the following detailed description with reference to the accompanying drawings.
The configuration and the operating principle of a liquid crystal display device according to an embodiment of the present invention will be described.
A liquid crystal display device of the present invention includes a liquid crystal cell having a liquid crystal layer provided between a pair of substrates. The liquid crystal layer is a horizontal orientation liquid crystal layer including liquid crystal molecules having a positive dielectric anisotropy. A horizontal orientation liquid crystal layer refers to a liquid crystal layer in which the liquid crystal molecules are aligned so that the long axis thereof is generally parallel (with small pretilt angles) to the substrate plane (typically provided with an alignment film) in the absence of an applied voltage. Specifically, this type of liquid crystal layer includes a TN alignment liquid crystal layer, and a homogenous alignment type liquid crystal layer in which an alignment film is subjected to an antiparallel rubbing process. In response to an electric field applied by a pair of electrodes provided so as to oppose each other via the liquid crystal layer therebetween, the orientation direction of the liquid crystal molecules of the liquid crystal layer changes, thereby modulating light passing through the liquid crystal layer (changing the polarization of the light). The pair of electrodes define pixels of the liquid crystal cell. Herein, a region of a liquid crystal cell corresponding to a "pixel", which is the minimum unit of display, will also be referred to as a "pixel" for the sake of simplicity. For example, each pixel is defined by a pixel electrode and a counter electrode opposing the pixel electrode in an active matrix type LCD, and by an intersection between one of column electrodes (signal electrodes) and one of row electrodes (scanning electrodes), which are both arranged in a stripe pattern, in a passive matrix type LCD.
A pair of polarizers and at least one phase difference compensator provided outside the liquid crystal cell are arranged so that the transmittance is lower in the absence of an electric field applied across the liquid crystal layer than in the presence of an electric field applied across the liquid crystal layer. For example, the polarizers are arranged via the liquid crystal cell therebetween so that the polarization axes thereof are orthogonal to each other. A liquid crystal display device of the present invention displays an image in a so-called "normally black mode" (hereinafter referred to as "NB mode"). As will be described later in detail, in a configuration where an image is displayed in the NB mode by using a horizontal orientation liquid crystal layer having a positive dielectric anisotropy, the retardation in a black display can be effectively compensated for over a wide viewing angle by using an phase difference compensator. Thus, a desirable black display can be realized over a wide viewing angle.
The above-described configuration capable of improving the viewing angle dependence of a black display in the NB mode will be referred to as the "first configuration".
However, employing the first configuration alone, there remains a problem that the brightness depends on the viewing angle direction in the presence of an applied voltage (particularly in an intermediate gray level display). The pair of electrodes of the liquid crystal display device of the present invention are configured so as to produce a transverse electric field component parallel to the plane of the liquid crystal layer in the presence of an applied voltage therebetween, so that the orientation axis direction, which is defined by the azimuth angle of the orientation direction of the liquid crystal molecules near the center of the liquid crystal layer in the thickness direction thereof, is changed by the transverse electric field component. In other words, in the presence of an applied voltage (particularly in an intermediate gray level display), the orientation axis direction of the liquid crystal molecules is changed by a transverse electric field component according to the voltage. For example, the azimuth angle direction of the orientation direction of each liquid crystal molecule of the liquid crystal layer varies depending on the position thereof in the thickness direction of the liquid crystal layer. Therefore, the optical anisotropy of the liquid crystal layer in each region where the orientation axis direction of the liquid crystal molecules is changed by the transverse electric field component is averaged, thereby reducing the viewing angle dependence of the brightness. The effect of reducing the optical anisotropy of the liquid crystal layer, by the transverse electric field component, is provided only in the presence of an applied voltage, and not in the absence of an applied voltage. Therefore, the effect does not deteriorate the high display quality of a black display in the NB mode realized by the first configuration. The configuration for producing a transverse electric field component that changes the orientation axis direction, which is defined by the azimuth angle of the orientation direction of the liquid crystal molecules near the center of the liquid crystal layer in the thickness direction thereof, will be referred to as the "second configuration".
Of course, the viewing angle characteristics can be further improved by employing a so-called "multi-domain structure", where the liquid crystal layer has a plurality of domains having different orientation axis directions in each of a plurality of pixels. In order to average the viewing angle dependence of the display quality, the plurality of domains preferably include domains whose orientation axis directions differ from each other by 180°C. Particularly, it is preferred that domains whose orientation axis directions differ from each other by 180°C are arranged so as to oppose each other. With such an arrangement, it is easy to compensate for the retardation in a black display, as will be described later.
It should be noted that according to the present invention, a plurality of regions where the orientation axis directions of the liquid crystal molecules differ from one another can be formed by a transverse electric field component, without forming a multi-domain structure by using a rubbing process, an optical alignment process, or the like, as in the prior art. In other words, a liquid crystal layer having a mono-domain structure in the absence of an applied voltage can be turned into a multi-domain structure by applying a voltage thereacross.
For example, such a configuration can be realized by configuring the pair of electrodes so as to produce a plurality of transverse electric field components of different directions in the presence of an applied voltage therebetween. In order to average the viewing angle dependence of the display quality, the plurality of transverse electric field components of different directions preferably include transverse electric field components whose directions differ from each other by 180°C. Moreover, the viewing angle characteristics can be further averaged by employing a configuration in which the liquid crystal layer has, in each of a plurality of pixels, a plurality of regions whose orientation axis directions change in different directions in the presence of an applied voltage, wherein the plurality of regions have an equal area and are arranged symmetrically. It is preferred that the direction of the transverse electric field component produced by the pair of electrodes is at an angle of 60°C to 90°C with respect to the orientation axis direction of the liquid crystal layer in the absence of an applied voltage, whereby the orientation of the liquid crystal molecules changes continuously and symmetrically.
The production of a transverse electric field component that changes the orientation axis direction of the liquid crystal molecules according to the voltage applied between the pair of electrodes can be realized by, for example, using a conductive layer having openings therein as one of the pair of electrodes. Each of such openings typically has a slit shape (elongate rectangular shape). By using a conductive layer having slit-shaped openings therein as the electrode, the transverse electric field component as described above is produced, whereby it is possible to realize a liquid crystal display device in which the viewing angle dependence of the brightness is improved. By providing a plurality of slit-shaped openings and variously changing the arrangement of the openings, it is possible to control the viewing angle dependence. Transverse electric field components whose directions differ from each other by 180°C are produced respectively near the opposing long sides of each slit-shaped opening. The other electrode opposing the electrode having slit-shaped openings therein may be a solid electrode (a flat electrode with no special structural features). Thus, a liquid crystal display device of the present invention can be obtained only by providing openings in one of a pair of electrodes, and the liquid crystal display device can be easily manufactured by using a manufacturing method known in the art. Of course, openings may alternatively be provided in each of the pair of opposing electrodes.
While a liquid crystal display device of the present invention has desirable viewing angle characteristics as described above, the viewing angle characteristics can be further improved by providing an additional phase difference compensator for compensating for the retardation with respect to light incident from a direction inclined from the direction normal to the plane of the liquid crystal layer in the absence of an applied voltage.
The structure and the operation of each embodiment of the liquid crystal display device of the present invention will now be described in detail with reference to the drawings.
First, the configuration capable of improving the viewing angle dependence of a black display in the NB mode (the first configuration) will be described.
The first configuration used in a liquid crystal display device (LCD) 100 of the present invention will be described with reference to FIG. 1. The configuration for producing a transverse electric field (the second configuration) used in the LCD 100 of the present invention will be described later.
The LCD 100 includes a liquid crystal layer 101, a pair of electrodes 100a and 100b for applying an electric field across the liquid crystal layer 101, a pair of phase difference compensators 102 and 103 provided respectively on both sides of the liquid crystal layer 101, further phase difference compensators 104 and 105 provided on the outer side of the phase difference compensators 102 and 103, respectively, and a pair of polarizers 106 and 107 arranged in a crossed Nicols state interposing the aforementioned elements therebetween.
Note that the liquid crystal layer 101 is provided between a pair of substrates (not shown), and the electrodes 100a and 100b are provided on one side of the pair of substrates, respectively, that is closer to the liquid crystal layer 101. The structure whose profile is defined by the pair of substrates is referred to as a "liquid crystal cell 100A". Moreover, as the liquid crystal layer 101 is formed between a pair of substrates (e.g., glass substrates) opposing each other, the plane of the liquid crystal layer 101 is parallel to the substrate plane, and the thickness of the liquid crystal layer 101 is defined in the direction normal to the substrate plane. Moreover, the display plane of the LCD 100 is parallel to the substrate plane.
The liquid crystal layer 101 is a horizontal orientation liquid crystal layer. Herein, a homogenous alignment type liquid crystal layer formed by a nematic liquid crystal material having a positive dielectric anisotropy and a horizontal alignment film having been subjected to a rubbing process will be used as an example. Moreover, the liquid crystal layer 101 is divided orientation-wise into two domains 101a and 101b (in other words, the liquid crystal layer 101 has a multi-domain structure) in order to improve the viewing angle characteristics. Each ellipse in
Note that the orientation axis direction is a direction defined by the azimuth angle of the orientation direction of the liquid crystal molecules 10 near the center of the liquid crystal layer in the thickness direction thereof, and it is defined in view of the pretilt of the liquid crystal molecules 10 (an inclination in a plane perpendicular to the substrate plane) with the tip of the arrow corresponding to the end of the liquid crystal molecules 10 that goes up when the liquid crystal molecules 10 rise from the substrate plane in response to an applied voltage. Moreover, for the purpose of illustrating the viewing angle characteristics, the direction parallel to the orientation axis direction 116 (116a and 116b) will be referred to as the "top-bottom direction", and the direction perpendicular thereto will be referred to as the "left-right direction", with respect to the observer.
Each of the phase difference compensators 102, 103, 104 and 105 may be any compensator having an appropriate refractive index anisotropy, such as an phase difference compensation film, phase difference compensation plate or a liquid crystal cell. Each of arrows 108 and 109 of the phase difference compensators 102 and 103 represents an axis along which the refractive index ellipsoid of the respective one of the phase difference compensators (all having positive, uniaxial characteristics) has the maximum refractive index (i.e., the slow axis). The phase difference compensators 104 and 105 are biaxial phase difference compensators, and each of arrows 110 and 111 extending in the direction normal to the plane of the respective one of the compensators represents an axis along which the compensator as a whole has the maximum refractive index, while each of arrows 112 and 113 extending in the plane of the respective one of the compensators represents an axis of the maximum refractive index in the plane of the compensator. Each of arrows 114 and 115 of the polarizers 106 and 107 represents the polarization axis (transmission axis).
The orientation axis direction 116 (116a and 116b), the slow axes 108 and 109, the axes 112 and 113 of the maximum in-plane refractive index, and the polarization axes 114 and 115 are each in a plane parallel to the substrate plane of the liquid crystal cell. Moreover, the slow axes 108 and 109 are both generally orthogonal to the orientation axis direction 116. Furthermore, the axis 112 of the maximum in-plane refractive index is generally orthogonal to the polarization axis 114, and the axis 113 of the maximum in-plane refractive index is generally orthogonal to the polarization axis 115. The polarization axes 114 and 115 are generally orthogonal to each other. Moreover, the angle between the orientation axis direction 116 and the polarization axis 115 (and 114) is about 45°C.
The LCD 100 uses the phase difference compensators 104, 102, 103 and 105 for phase difference compensation so as to cancel out, for light incident from any direction, the retardation due to the refractive index anisotropy of the liquid crystal layer 101 in the absence of an applied voltage (where the liquid crystal molecules 10 are aligned generally parallel to the substrate plane). In other words, the optical characteristics of the phase difference compensators and the liquid crystal cell of the LCD 100 are adjusted so that the polarization of linearly-polarized light having passed through the polarizer 106 is substantially the same as the polarization of light having exited from the phase difference compensator 105 after passing through the phase difference compensators 104 and 102, the liquid crystal cell 100A and the phase difference compensator 103 in this order, for any viewing angle. Moreover, since the liquid crystal layer 101 of the LCD 100 has a two-divided orientation (domains 101a and 101b), the asymmetry of the brightness change as the viewing angle is changed in the orientation axis direction (typically equal to the rubbing direction) is improved.
As described above, the LCD 100 realizes a high-quality black display in the absence of an applied voltage, irrespective of the viewing direction, and has little decrease in the contrast ratio as the viewing angle is changed toward an inclined direction in the orientation axis direction (the rubbing direction).
The function of the first configuration capable of improving the viewing angle dependence of the display quality in a black display will now be described in greater detail.
An LCD of the present invention has a horizontal orientation liquid crystal layer. A horizontal orientation liquid crystal layer is obtained by a liquid crystal material having a positive dielectric anisotropy and a horizontal alignment film. These materials are advantageous in that they are reliable and can be selected from a wide variety. The liquid crystal molecules of a horizontal orientation liquid crystal layer are in a stable alignment in the absence of an applied voltage due to an alignment process positively performed such as, for example, a rubbing process or an optical alignment process.
An example where orientation division is employed in order to improve the viewing angle dependence will now be described, though orientation division is not always necessary. It should be noted that with a configuration where an image is displayed in the NB mode by using a horizontal orientation liquid crystal layer, there is an advantage that the viewing angle dependence of the display quality of a black display can be effectively compensated for even if orientation division is employed, as will be described later.
Changes in brightness of a pixel having an undivided orientation in the top-bottom direction and the left-right direction will be described with reference to
A liquid crystal cell 200A illustrated in
Upon application of an appropriate electric field across the liquid crystal layer 201, the liquid crystal molecules 10 rotate (rise) about the x axis in the z-y plane, as indicated by an arrow in FIG. 2A. FIG. 2B and
When the viewing angle eb is changed in a plane parallel to the z-x plane (in the left-right direction), the retardation of the liquid crystal layer 201 changes symmetrically about the normal direction (èb=0°C, the direction normal to the substrate), as illustrated in FIG. 2C. In contrast, when the viewing angle èa is changed in a plane parallel to the z-y plane (in the top-bottom direction), the retardation of the liquid crystal layer 201 changes asymmetrically about the normal direction (èa=0°C), as illustrated in FIG. 2B.
Since the change in retardation is directly related to the change in brightness, the brightness changes symmetrically as èb changes (as the viewing angle changes in the left-right direction), while the brightness changes asymmetrically, and to a significant degree, as èa changes (as the viewing angle changes in the top-bottom direction). Thus, it is important to reduce the change in retardation for the change in èa.
The significant viewing angle dependence of the retardation for the change in èa is due to the optical anisotropy of the liquid crystal molecules 10. Specifically, since the long axis of the ellipsoid of the liquid crystal molecule 10 is parallel to the z-x plane and inclined toward one direction with respect to the x axis, the ellipticity of the liquid crystal molecule 10 decreases, from that when it is observed from the normal direction, as the viewing angle is inclined toward one direction in the y-z plane, whereas the ellipticity of the liquid crystal molecule 10 increases as the viewing angle is inclined toward the opposite direction. Thus, the appearance (the magnitude of the refractive index anisotropy) of the liquid crystal molecule 10 varies depending on the direction from which it is viewed, since the liquid crystal molecule 10 is inclined toward one direction. To address this problem, measures can be taken so that the above-described change in the ellipticity of the liquid crystal molecule 10 is substantially averaged regardless of the direction toward which the viewing angle is inclined. Specifically, the problem can be addressed by employing, as the liquid crystal layer 201, a multi-domain structure (e.g., a two-divided orientation) having two regions whose inclination directions differ from each other by 180°C.
In view of the above, in the LCD 100, each pixel is divided into the two domains 101a and 101b in which the liquid crystal molecules 10 rise in respective directions differing from each other by 180°C, as illustrated in FIG. 3A. The retardations of the domains 101a and 101b change as indicated by curves A and B, respectively, in
The LCD 100 of the present invention is an NB mode LCD producing a black display in the absence of an applied voltage.
Typically, an LCD changes the orientation of the liquid crystal molecules by an external electric field applied across the liquid crystal layer to change the value of retardation of the liquid crystal layer, thereby changing the transmittance for light coming from a light source provided on the back of the liquid crystal cell to obtain an intended brightness for black, white or an intermediate gray level. The electric field to be applied across the liquid crystal layer to obtain a black display (i.e., the orientation of the liquid crystal molecules for realizing a black display) may be set arbitrarily. A typical liquid crystal display device using a horizontal alignment film and a liquid crystal material having a positive dielectric anisotropy employs a normally white mode (hereinafter referred to as "NW mode"), where a white display is produced in the absence of an applied voltage, with the display brightness decreasing as the applied voltage increases. In contrast, the present invention employs the NB mode, where a black display is produced in the absence of an applied voltage, with the display brightness increasing as the applied voltage increases, and the present invention realizes a display with a high contrast ratio even when observed from an inclined direction by suppressing the increase in display brightness occurring when the liquid crystal display device in a black display is observed from an inclined direction.
First, problems with conventional NW mode LCDs will be described with reference to
A liquid crystal cell 300A schematically illustrated in
When a sufficient electric field is applied across the liquid crystal layer 301, the liquid crystal molecules 10 near the center of the liquid crystal layer 301 in the thickness direction thereof rotate in the y-z plane about the x axis and rise to be generally perpendicular to the substrate plane, as illustrated in FIG. 4A. The liquid crystal molecules 10 near the horizontal alignment films (i.e., near the electrodes) cannot rise due to the anchoring effect of the horizontal alignment films. As a result, the retardation of the liquid crystal layer 301 changes as indicated by a curve shown in
However, when a multi-domain structure as described above is employed in order to make the viewing angle dependence of the brightness in an intermediate gray level display symmetric, the following problem occurs in the NW mode.
As illustrated in
For the change in the viewing angle èb in the z-x plane, the retardations of the domains 401a and 401b are substantially the same and can be represented by a curve Cl which takes its minimum value at èb=0°C (normal direction), as illustrated in FIG. 5C. In contrast, for the change in the viewing angle èa in the z-y plane, the retardations of the domains 401a and 401b take their respective minimum values (RzA and RzB) at different viewing angles èa, as indicated by curves Al and B1, respectively, in FIG. 5B.
It is difficult to compensate for such a viewing angle dependence of the retardation of the liquid crystal cell 400A, for any èa and èb, by using an phase difference compensator having a uniform optical characteristic across the display plane. Of course, it may be possible to achieve such a compensation by using an phase difference compensator having a plurality of regions with different optical characteristics respectively corresponding to the domains 401a and 401b. However, such an phase difference compensator is not practical in view of the manufacturing cost and the manufacturing technique. Thus, when a LCD having a two-divided orientation is used in the NW mode, it is difficult to obtain a display with a high contrast ratio when observed from an inclined direction.
The above-described problem can be improved by employing the NB mode where a black display is produced in the absence of an applied voltage. The effect of improving the viewing angle dependence by using an phase difference compensator in the NB mode will be described with reference to
As illustrated in
As one way to do so, uniaxial phase difference compensators are used as the phase difference compensators 502 and 503 such that slow axes 508 and 509 are both orthogonal to a long axis direction (orientation axis direction) 516 of the liquid crystal molecules 10 and parallel to the substrate plane. Moreover, the phase difference compensators 502 and 503 are adjusted so that their retardations in the normal direction are substantially the same as each other, and so that the sum of the retardations is substantially equal to the retardation of the liquid crystal layer 501 in the absence of an applied voltage as observed from the normal direction. Since the slow axis of the liquid crystal layer 501 (parallel to 516) is orthogonal to the slow axes 508 and 509 of the phase difference compensators 502 and 503, their retardations are canceled out by each other.
FIG. 6B and
Also when orientation division is employed as in the liquid crystal layer 101 of
The retardation of a horizontal orientation liquid crystal layer in the absence of an applied voltage can be compensated for even more effectively by providing another phase difference compensator, in addition to the phase difference compensators 502 and 503 illustrated in
The viewing angle dependence of the retardation of the configuration 500 illustrated in FIG. 6B and
Thus, the viewing angle dependence of the retardation of the configuration 500 can be even more compensated for by, for example, further providing phase difference compensators 504 and 505 outside the configuration 500 of
FIG. 7B and
As described above, when a horizontal orientation liquid crystal layer is used in the NB mode, the effective retardation can be adjusted to be substantially zero for any èa and èb by combining together appropriate phase difference compensators, even for a liquid crystal layer having a divided orientation, whereby it is possible to easily obtain an LCD having desirable viewing angle characteristics.
Note that positive uniaxial phase difference compensators are used as the phase difference compensators 504 and 505 in the above description for the sake of simplicity. In fact, however, the retardation can be compensated for more effectively by employing biaxial phase difference compensators that have a refractive index anisotropy also in the x-y plane (the phase difference compensators 104 and 105 illustrated in FIG. 1). Of course, an phase difference compensator having its slow axis along the z axis may be combined with an phase difference compensator having its slow axis in the x-y plane.
As described above, the first configuration enables compensation of the viewing angle dependence of the retardation in a black display by providing a display device in the NB mode (where the display brightness (transmittance) is lower in the absence of an applied voltage across the liquid crystal layer than in the presence of an applied voltage across the liquid crystal layer) using a horizontal orientation liquid crystal layer. As a result, it is possible to realize a display with a high contrast ratio in which the display brightness in a black display does not increase when observed from any viewing angle. Moreover, there is another advantage that a horizontal orientation liquid crystal layer can be provided by using a liquid crystal material having a positive dielectric anisotropy and a horizontal alignment film that are desirable in terms of the productivity and stability.
Note that the above description has been directed to how the viewing angle dependence of the brightness in an intermediate gray level display in the top-bottom direction and in the left-right direction can be improved by employing orientation division of the liquid crystal layer for each pixel. However, orientation division is not indispensable, but the viewing angle dependence of the brightness in an intermediate gray level display can alternatively be improved with the second configuration to be described below. It should be noted that of course the symmetry of the viewing angle dependence of the brightness in an intermediate gray level display can be improved by employing orientation division in combination with the first configuration. More importantly, if the first configuration realizing a display device in the NB mode by using a horizontal orientation liquid crystal layer is employed, the viewing angle dependence of the retardation in a black display can be effectively compensated for, whereby the viewing angle dependence of the brightness in a black display can be effectively compensated for, also when orientation division is employed in combination therewith.
Next, the second configuration for reducing the viewing angle dependence of the display brightness in the presence of an applied voltage will be described.
In the second configuration, there is produced a transverse electric field component that changes the orientation axis direction defined by the azimuth direction of the orientation direction of liquid crystal molecules near the center of the liquid crystal layer in the thickness direction thereof, thereby positively introducing a distribution in the orientation direction of the liquid crystal molecules in an intermediate gray level to white display state (a display state other than a black display state) so as to reduce the viewing angle dependence of the display brightness. Moreover, the second configuration does not adversely affect the viewing angle dependence in a black display, which is improved by the first configuration described above.
The function of the second configuration will now be described with reference to the drawings.
As illustrated in
In the present invention, an effect equivalent to adding together the viewing angle dependences for different azimuth angles as described above is obtained by positively controlling the angle between the orientation direction of the liquid crystal molecules (the axis obtained by orthogonally projecting the long axis of the liquid crystal molecules onto the substrate) and the y axis so as to introduce a distribution in the value of φLC in the plane of the liquid crystal layer and in the thickness direction of the cell (so that the value is not constant across the cell).
Where the orientation directions of the liquid crystal molecules are aligned with one another, as illustrated in
In contrast, according to the present invention, the orientation directions φLC of the liquid crystal molecules are not aligned (have a distribution) in the thickness direction in an intermediate gray level display (in the presence of an applied voltage), as conceptually illustrated in FIG. 9C. It is important to ensure that the orientation directions φLC of the liquid crystal molecules are not aligned (have a distribution) only in the presence of an applied voltage, while the effect is lost in the absence of an applied voltage, i.e., in a black display. This is because the orientation of the liquid crystal molecules in the absence of an applied voltage is defined by the first configuration so as to control the viewing angle dependence in a black display.
The introduction of a distribution in the orientation direction φLC of the liquid crystal molecules only in the presence of an applied voltage, as conceptually illustrated in
A typical electrode used in a liquid crystal cell is a flat and uniform conductive layer and has a generally uniform conductivity across each pixel, as electrodes 1000a and 1000b illustrated in FIG. 10A. Therefore, the potential between the electrodes, i.e., the potential in a plane parallel to the electrode plane in the liquid crystal layer (i.e., the plane of the liquid crystal layer, the substrate plane, the x-y plane), is constant at any position. For example, the potential distribution along an arbitrary axis parallel to the x axis (or the y axis) in an arbitrary plane parallel to the plane of a liquid crystal layer 1001 is constant, as illustrated in FIG. 10B. Therefore, an electric field component parallel to the plane of the liquid crystal layer 1001 (a transverse electric field component) is not produced. Of course, the potential varies as a function (typically a linear function) of the position (thickness) in the direction normal to the plane of the liquid crystal layer 1001 (the thickness direction, the z axis direction), and an electric field (vertical electric field component) is generated in the thickness direction of the liquid crystal layer 1001.
An embodiment of a liquid crystal display device having the second configuration of the present invention will be described with reference to
In a liquid crystal cell 1100 illustrated in
Note that having the long side of the slit-shaped openings 1120 generally parallel to the orientation direction of the liquid crystal molecules (the y axis) provides an effect of ensuring the symmetry of the change in the orientation of the liquid crystal molecules by a transverse electric field component and preventing the orientation of the liquid crystal molecules from changing discontinuously. In order to obtain such an effect, it is preferred that the angle between the orientation axis direction in the absence of an applied voltage and the long side direction of the slit-shaped openings 1120 (the y axis in the drawings) is 30°C or less.
The function of the electrode structure having the slit-shaped openings 1120 will be described with reference to
When a voltage is applied between the electrodes 1100a and 1100b illustrated in
As illustrated in
The potential is constant along the y axis in the plane of the liquid crystal layer 1101, as illustrated in
As can be seen from
The potential distribution illustrated in
The potential of the electrode 1100a illustrated in
The potential distribution along the x axis in the plane of the liquid crystal layer 1101 depends on the magnitude of the potential difference VDD between the electrodes 1100a and 1100b, and changes as illustrated in
As described above, application of a voltage between electrodes one of which includes openings, as illustrated in
Moreover, since the potential has a distribution in the x axis direction in the plane of the liquid crystal layer 1101, as illustrated in
Thus, in an intermediate gray level to white display state (a display state other than a black display state) where a voltage is applied between the electrodes 1100a and 1100b, a distribution is introduced in the orientation direction of the liquid crystal molecules (the orientation directions are not aligned with one another), thereby reducing the viewing angle dependence of the display brightness. The distribution of the orientation direction (φLC) is created not only in the thickness direction of the liquid crystal layer 1101 (the z direction) but also in the x axis direction in the plane of the liquid crystal layer 1101.
The phenomenon as described above, in which a transverse electric field component according to the applied voltage causes the orientation direction of the liquid crystal molecules to vary depending on the position in the liquid crystal layer, can be explained as follows.
Defining the orientation axis direction as being a direction defined by the azimuth angle of the orientation direction of the liquid crystal molecules near the center of the liquid crystal layer in the thickness direction thereof, the above-described phenomenon can be said to be a phenomenon in which the orientation axis direction is changed by the transverse electric field component produced upon application of a voltage. Specifically, each of the liquid crystal molecules aligned in a certain orientation axis direction in the absence of an applied voltage changes its orientation axis direction by the transverse electric field component produced upon application of a voltage. The degree of the change depends on the magnitude of the transverse electric field, and thus may vary depending on its position in the liquid crystal layer (the position in the thickness direction of the liquid crystal layer and/or the position in the plane of the liquid crystal layer). Therefore, a plurality of regions having different orientation axis directions are created in the liquid crystal layer in the presence of an applied voltage, thereby averaging the viewing angle dependence.
As described above, the second configuration realized by an electrode structure including openings does not disturb the orientation of the liquid crystal molecules in the absence of an applied voltage which is required by the first configuration. Conversely, applying the second configuration to a liquid crystal display device in the NW mode including a horizontal alignment film and a liquid crystal material having a positive dielectric anisotropy is not practical. This is because while it is necessary to provide a sufficient potential to the bottom portion in
In the above description, the effect of a transverse electric field component has been described with respect to a homogenous alignment type liquid crystal layer in which the twist angle of the liquid crystal molecules in the initial alignment state is 0°C. However, similar functions/effects can also be obtained with a twisted liquid crystal layer having a twist angle greater than 0°C. The functions/effects of a transverse electric field component with respect to a twisted liquid crystal layer in which the twist angle is 90°C will be described with reference to FIG. 13.
In the case of conventional electrodes, the liquid crystal molecules of the 90°C twisted liquid crystal layer change the azimuth angle φLC of the orientation direction by 90°C from the surface of one electrode to the surface of the other electrode, as shown by the curve 13A. The azimuth angle φLC of the liquid crystal molecules near the center of the liquid crystal layer in the thickness direction (z d/2) is 45°C. This is not changed by changing the electric field to be applied across the liquid crystal layer.
On the other hand, in the case of the electrodes one of which includes openings formed therein, the azimuth angle φLC of the orientation direction of the liquid crystal molecules changes in the thickness direction, as illustrated in
Thus, even in the case where a 90°C twisted liquid crystal layer is used, it is possible to change the orientation axis direction of the liquid crystal layer and to reduce the viewing angle dependence by, for example, producing a transverse electric field component using the electrodes one of which includes slit-shaped openings as described above.
The liquid crystal display device of the present invention will now be described by way of specific examples and comparative examples.
First, a liquid crystal display device only having the first configuration will be described. An LCD of Example 1 has substantially the same configuration as that of the LCD 100 illustrated in
Specific electrode structure of each pixel and the orientation of the liquid crystal molecules of the LCD of Example 1 are illustrated in FIG. 14. The LCD of Example 1 illustrated in
The counter electrode 2101 is a single electrode provided as a common electrode for all the pixels, and each pixel electrode 2102 is connected to a TFT 2103. Each pixel electrode 2102 and a portion of the counter electrode 2101 opposing the pixel electrode 2102 together define a single pixel. The size of each pixel electrode 2102, i.e., the pixel size, of the LCD of Example 1 is 70 μm×210 μm. The electrode structure of the LCD of Example 1 is similar to the electrode structure illustrated in
Note that one of a pair of substrates of the color TFT-LCD on which the pixel electrodes 2102 and the TFTs 2103 are provided will be referred to as a "TFT substrate" (not shown), and the other substrate on which the counter electrode 2101 is provided will be referred to as a "CF (color filter) substrate". The basic structure and operation of color TFT-LCDs are well known in the art, and thus will not be described in detail herein.
The two domains whose orientation axis directions differ from each other by 180°C are formed as follows. Note that regions corresponding to the domains 101a and 101b of the LCD 100 illustrated in
First, a horizontal alignment film (not shown) capable of controlling the pretilt angle of the liquid crystal molecules through UV irradiation is applied on one side of the pixel electrodes 2102 and the counter electrode 2101 that is closer to the liquid crystal layer 2101. The horizontal alignment films are subjected to a rubbing process (parallel rubbing) in the direction indicated by arrows 2104 and 2105 in FIG. 14. The liquid crystal molecules on the horizontal alignment type film having been subjected to the rubbing process are aligned with one another with a pretilt angle of about 2°C in a direction defined by the rubbing direction.
Then, the horizontal alignment type films are irradiated with UV light in the region A (the lower half of the pixel) of the TFT substrate and in the region B (the upper half of the pixel) of the CF substrate. The UV irradiation changes the pretilt angle of the liquid crystal molecules, which is about 2°C through all regions before the UV irradiation, whereby the pretilt angle of the liquid crystal molecules in the irradiated regions (i.e., liquid crystal molecules 2106 on the TFT side in the region A and liquid crystal molecules 2107 on the CF substrate side in the region B) is selectively changed to about 0°C. Therefore, the orientation axis direction of the liquid crystal layer in the region A is defined by the orientation direction of liquid crystal molecules 2108 on the CF substrate side (having a pretilt angle of about 2°C), whereas the orientation axis direction of the liquid crystal layer in the region B is defined by the orientation direction of liquid crystal molecules 2109 on the TFT side (having a pretilt angle of about 2°C). As a result, the orientation axis direction in the region A and that in the region B are as indicated by arrows 2110 and 2111, respectively, in FIG. 14. The arrows 2110 and 2111 in
The distance between the counter electrode 2101 and the pixel electrodes 2102, i.e., the cell gap (the thickness of the liquid crystal layer), is 4 μm. As the liquid crystal material, a nematic liquid crystal material having a positive dielectric anisotropy Ä{dot over (a)} of 3.2 and a refractive index anisotropy Än of 0.065 is used.
As the phase difference compensators 102 and 103 illustrated in
As can be seen from the figures, the viewing angle dependence of the brightness is symmetric about the normal direction for any azimuth angle. It can also be seen that the change in brightness as the viewing angle is changed in a plane including the rubbing direction, as illustrated in
As described above, the LCD only having the first configuration provides a desirable black display in the normal direction and has a very high contrast ratio. Moreover, the viewing angle dependence of the brightness is made symmetric by the employment of orientation division. However, a gray level inversion occurs as the viewing angle is changed in a plane including the rubbing direction.
The second configuration is applied to the LCD of Example 1. Specifically, a slit structure as illustrated in
Specifically, as illustrated in
As can be seen from a comparison of
Thus, the LCD of the present invention has the second configuration together with the first configuration, thereby providing a desirable black display, a very high contrast ratio, and a reduced viewing angle dependence of the brightness.
Comparative Example 1 is a conventional NW mode, TN type LCD. A nematic liquid crystal material having a positive dielectric anisotropy Ä{dot over (a)} of 3.6 and a refractive index anisotropy An of 0.082 is used as the liquid crystal material, and the thickness of the liquid crystal layer is 4 μm.
However, as can be seen from iso-contrast curves (viewing angle characteristics) of the LCD of Comparative Example 1 illustrated in
As illustrated in FIG. 22A and
In Comparative Example 2, an electrode structure having slit-shaped openings (see
Moreover, as can be seen from iso-contrast curves (viewing angle characteristics) of the LCD of Comparative Example 2 illustrated in
Moreover,
However, as is apparent from FIG. 24A and
As can be seen from the above, the effect of the present invention is obtained by combining the second configuration with the first configuration (particularly the NB mode).
While the present invention has been described in a preferred embodiment, it will be apparent to those skilled in the art that the disclosed invention may be modified in numerous ways and may assume many embodiments other than that specifically set out and described above. Accordingly, it is intended by the appended claims to cover all modifications of the invention that fall within the true spirit and scope of the invention.
Watanabe, Keizo, Yoshida, Keisuke, Shimoshikiryou, Fumikazu
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